The last hundred years is often regarded as the heyday of the Border reivers, characterised by persistent raiding, feuding, and lawlessness perhaps the worst the Borders had seen. However, while the 16th century, especially its later decades is the best recorded, with the most surviving sources, this does not necessarily mean it was the most severe. It was the period we see the end of the liberties of
Redesdale and the end of the
Debatable Land. The era also saw the end of the militarised border. The
Union of the Crowns in 1603, when
James VI of Scotland succeeded to the English throne as James I, marked the end of centuries of conflict between the two kingdoms.
After Flodden Almost immediately after the Battle of Flodden, riders from Scotland launched raids, burning four towns in England. In response,
Dacre led punitive judicial raids, devastating towns such as
Annan and razing villages and buildings across
Teviotdale,
Liddesdale, and
Ewesdale, while seizing 4,000 head of cattle.
Settling the Debatable Land In the early 16th century, the Armstrongs and Grahams broke with Border custom by settling in the
Debatable Land, a territory long regarded as neutral and lawless. This incursion was acknowledged by the Scottish government as early as 1517 or 1518. Meanwhile, Lord Dacre, permitted loyal Scottish Grahams to settle its southern end, further eroding its no-man's-land status. One account suggests that the banished Grahams first settled in 1516, with the Armstrongs following in 1518, reportedly with Lord Dacre's approval. The policy of tolerating settlement in the Debatable Land did nothing to curb banditry in the Anglo-Scottish borderlands; criminality persisted, and the Armstrongs only grew more powerful.
'Heyday South of the Border' Throughout the 1520s, amid persistent
famine and
rinderpest outbreaks, the already overpopulated Cheviot Highlands suffered further strain. The ensuing social disruption, exacerbated by war, famine, and disease, fostered the rise of large bands of plunderers operating across the Anglo-Scottish borderlands. These groups sometimes coalesced around local minor noble or gentry figures into confederacies led by individuals such as Sir Nicholas Ridley in the early 1520s and later Sir William Lisle of Felton in the mid-to-late 1520s. Notably, both had previously served as lawmen, yet in the all to common Border formula, those charged with maintaining order increasingly became, effectively, poachers. Some, like the then
Warden and former Keeper of
Redesdale,
Thomas Dacre, 2nd Baron Dacre, got perilously close to being
outlawed for associating too closely with known thieves. In 1525, law and order had decayed so much that a raid got within 8 miles of the city of Newcastle. North of the border, Lord Dacre launched two massive raids against the Armstrongs of Liddesdale and the Debatable Land. In retaliation, the Armstrongs mounted raids into Cumbria. Dacre, in turn, responded again, but this time he retaliated by burning the towers of the sons of the infamous Johnny Armstrong. It is important to note that while the Armstrong-Dacre feud raged on, it was only one of many such raids and counter-raids along the border.
Monition of Cursing In 1525, the
Archbishop of Glasgow,
Gavin Dunbar, issued the extraordinary fifteen-hundred word
Monition of Cursing, damning all who dwelled in the Borders to hell.
I curse thair heid and all tha haris of their head; I curse thair face, thair ene, thair mouth, thair neise, thair toung, thair teith, thair crag, thair schulderis, thair breist, thair hert, thair stomok, thair bak, thair wame, thair armes, thair leggis, thair handis, thair feit, and everilk part of thair body, frae the top of thair heaid to the soill of thair feit, befoir and behding, within and without... It was also during this time that the
Bishop of Durham cursed the men of
Tynedale.
James V's Attainment of Majority This period was bookended in
1530 by the coming of age of
James V, who sought to assert royal authority over the Borders by imprisoning, and in some cases executing, leading figures he perceived as threats to his kingdom. Among those captured was the aforementioned Johnny Armstrong and 35 of his followers. Johnny's capture and execution was later romanticised in the ballad
Johnnie Armstrong.
Pilgrimage of the Grace The
Pilgrimage of Grace was a large-scale rebellion in
1536 against Henry VIII's religious and political reforms, particularly the
dissolution of the monasteries, drawing support from across Northern England. It was during this time that four rebel captains in Penrith made a proclamation that the king was not defending the area against the Scots and called for mutual defence and "...a prince to be made a king to defend the realm." The Pilgrimage of Grace had notable connections to the Border Reivers, particularly through the Percy family and their alliances in Tynedale and Redesdale.
Sir Thomas Percy, brother of Henry Percy, 6th Earl of Northumberland, played a leading role in the rebellion and sought the support of prominent Border surnames. Representatives from Tynedale and Redesdale, including Edward and Cuthbert Charlton of Bellingham and John Hall of Otterburn, were present at the
Pontefract meeting with the
Duke of Norfolk. Their involvement was likely facilitated by ‘Little’ John Heron of
Chipchase, a key Percy ally with strong ties to the Charltons. Heron leveraged these connections to rally Border support, including resistance to the dissolution of
Hexham Abbey, with the Charltons and their followers pledging their loyalty in exchange for payment. The reivers' participation extended beyond the rebellion itself, as seen in their role in the occupation of Ford Castle and the assassination of Roger Fenwick, the newly appointed Keeper of Tynedale, in early 1537. In 1536,
Henry VIII abolished
Redesdale’s liberty status and fully integrated it into the county of
Northumberland. Lawlessness increased with the downfall of the Dacre in the West and the disgrace of the Percies in the East, as no Border lord could unite the Surnames under a single banner.
The Borders during the Rough Wooing History may not repeat itself, but it does rhyme. Like his father, James IV, who perished at
Flodden, James V suffered a decisive defeat at the
Battle of Solway Moss in 1542. However, unlike his father, he did not fall in battle but succumbed to illness soon afterward. Once again, the Scottish throne passed to an infant - this time, a girl,
Mary, Queen of Scots. In the aftermath, Scotland descended into factional strife as rival nobles vied for the
Regency. Seizing the moment,
Henry VIII intervened in Scottish affairs, exploiting both political instability and the growing religious tensions of the Reformation. This led to the destruction of 192 towns, towers, and bastle-houses, as well as the capture of 20,000 cattle. This devastation only made the Borders more dangerous and lawless, with English and Scottish borderers including the local Scottish aristocracy, joining in the depredation. During this period, Henry VIII and his appointed man on the Borders,
Sir Richard Wharton, actively encouraged Scottish raiding. A notable instance occurred in 1543, when the Liddesdale Armstrongs were urged to raid and burn the lands and property of the Kerrs and Scotts. Despite this support, the Liddesdale Armstrongs carried out an attack on Hexham in the same year. A contemporary report described English villages as desolate, calling for their repopulation and for increased enforcement by local garrisons. Included among the Scottish Surnames most actively fighting alongside the English Borderers, southern English troops and foreign mercenaries were the Olivers, Davidsons, Pringles, Taits, Youngs, Turnballs, Elliots, Crosers, Nixons, Armstrongs and Rutherfords. The principle target of these raids were the Surnames Maxwell and Kerr. In 1552, the long-standing feud between the Scotts and the Kerrs spilled into Edinburgh, where
Sir Walter Scott of Buccleuch was assassinated by members of the Kerr family. Following the Pilgrimage of the Graces, Henry VIII took a far greater interest in the Borders - even making himself a Warden. This seemed to reduce banditry and lawlessness temporarily. However, by the late 1540s and into the 1550s government in the south again lost interest and reduced expenditure which lead once again to lawlessness and 'wilderness'. A report written found that many castles that had been destroyed in the last half century or more were still ruined and accused the local gentry of disinterested in maintaining law and order.
The Borders in the Age of Queens With the accession of
Mary, Queen of Scots, and
Queen Mary I of England, both
Catholic monarchs, peace should have returned to the Border. However, with decades, perhaps centuries, of ongoing antagonism between the two states and a deeply entrenched culture of raiding, this did not happen.
The end of the Debatable Land At the
Treaty of Norham officially ending
'the Rough Wooing', the
Debatable Land was finally divided between Scotland and England. The division was decided in 1552 by a French ambassador, who drew a simple straight line to evenly split the territory between the two nations. However, this seemingly simple tale took a turn, as a slightly different boundary was ultimately chosen, one that now forms the present-day border, known as
Scots Dyke. This maybe due to it marking where the parishes of Kirkandrews-on-Esk and Canonbie meet. Despite the division, the March Day courts were overwhelmed, with a five-hundred bills of complaint recorded in a single session, while an official attempt to suppress banditry in Liddesdale was forcefully repulsed.
Accession of Elizabeth I With the accession of
Queen Elizabeth I in
1558, England saw its last monarch to rule before the end of the Border as a lawless frontier. Nevertheless, the Border remained very much alive on both sides.
The Scottish Reformation, the Borders, and Mary's downfall In 1564, a feud erupted between the
Elliots and the
Scotts, marked by cycles of raids and retaliation. As tensions escalated, this conflict became entangled with the broader political and religious instability of the
Scottish Reformation, where both the English and Scottish crowns vied for influence in the Borderlands. The Protestant
Lord Moray, James Stewart, sought to weaken the Catholic
Mary, Queen of Scots, further exacerbating the turbulence. Queen Mary's half-brother,
James Stewart, led a foray into the region, capturing between twenty and thirty reivers, before seizing another forty. Amidst this unrest,
James, Earl of Bothwell was involved in Border feuds. He survived an attack by
Little Jock Elliot of Park in 1566.
Mary came from Jedburgh to see Bothwell at
Hermitage Castle while he recovered from his wounds. This visit marked the beginning of a closer relationship between Mary and Bothwell, and his political influence grew. Bothwell was widely suspected of orchestrating
Lord Darnley's murder, and shortly after, he married Mary, sparking a political crisis. Their union, controversial due to the circumstances of Darnley's death, led ultimately to
Mary's abdication in 1567.
Rising of the North After the rebellion, Mary fled south to England in 1568, seeking Elizabeth's protection. However, Elizabeth regarded Mary as a political threat due to her Catholic claim to the English throne, setting the stage for further unrest. In 1569, major northern Catholic magnates, such as
Thomas Percy, 7th Earl of Northumberland (recently removed from his position of March Warden of the East and Middle March) and
Charles Neville, 6th Earl of Westmorland led the
Rising of the North in an attempt to restore Catholic rule and potentially install Mary on the throne. They were joined by
Leonard Dacre, a nephew of the
Dacres of Gilsland (a family line that had fallen into abeyance), who felt aggrieved by Queen Elizabeth's land allocation decisions. The failure of the Rising of the North forced the Percies and Nevilles to flee to Scotland, leaving them with no refuge but the infamous
Liddesdale, where they were compelled to make peace with the many thieves and outlaws who resided there. There, in Liddesdale, the fugitive earls were received by the notorious Black Ormiston and Jock-of-the-Side, the latter was known for his participation in the killing of Lord Darnley. In the chaos of their flight, the fugitives not only had to contend with a superior royal army but also suffered the theft of horses and clothing by local outlaws. Another Borderer, Hector of Harelaw, captured the Earl of Northumberland and handed him over to the Regent Moray. Reprisals were swift and brutal: scores of impoverished Borderers were summarily executed without trial. On the Scottish-side of the border, there were issues over finding qualified presbyter for the new Presbyterian church in the later 16th century.
After the Rising The downfall of the leading magnates on the English frontier created greater opportunities for banditry. In one raid in the English Middle Marches alone, 140 captives were taken from one township. Following this, English Wardens of the March rode across burning and destroying property of those who had supported the Rising of the North and outlaws. Banditry persisted for decades, necessitating continued
Truce Days, some ending in violence, as seen in the
Raid of the Redeswire (
1575) and Windgyle (
1585), mirroring an earlier Truce Day in the first decade of the 1500s.
The final years Although both kingdoms were united by religion and allied, the latter part of the 16th century saw a perceived deterioration in conditions along the Border, with tensions intensifying in the years leading up to the
Union of the Crowns in
1603 according to
George MacDonald Fraser. Though according to Anna Groundwater, large scale raiding was reportedly in decline in the late 16th century. In 1587, the government of James VI wanting to prove it's capability to the English, who he was sure he was soon to be king of, introduced a new act in an attempt to suppress reiving.
Kinmont Willie It is not entirely clear how or why English warden
Lord Thomas Scrope captured the infamous
Kinmont Willie following a Truce Day in
1596, thus breaking
customary law. This greatly enraged the Scottish warden of the West March,
Walter Scott of Buccleuch, Keeper of Liddesdale, who then led a daring, but successful raid into
Carlisle Castle to free Kinmont Willie. Among the known outlaws who joined the raid were several notable lawmen and landowners, including Aud Watt of Harden and the Carleton brothers, major landowners in northern Cumberland and former lawmen. This event is remembered in the ballad
Kinmont Willie. This
jailbreak greatly upset
Queen Elizabeth I and created a diplomatic dispute between the two kingdoms. After several months, during which he led raids into England,
Bold Buccleuch eventually surrendered, travelled to London, and returned in exchange for his son, emerging from the ordeal as a changed man.
End of the Border By the death of
Elizabeth I of England, things had come to such a pitch along the border that the English government considered re-fortifying and rebuilding
Hadrian's Wall. When Elizabeth died, there was an especially violent outbreak of raiding known as "Ill Week", resulting from the convenient belief that the laws of a kingdom were suspended between the death of a sovereign and the proclamation of the successor. Upon his accession to the English throne,
James VI of Scotland (who became James I of England) moved hard against the reivers, abolishing border law and the very term "Borders" in favour of "Middle
Shires", and dealing out stern justice to reivers. Although the Border reivers vanished following James IV/I suppression, patterns of violence and feuding, lawlessness and organised criminal activity reportedly persisted in parts of the borderlands into the early reign of
George III. ==Nature==